South Portland and Portland have been tracking these smell complaints since 2019. If you've been smelling something, you're not alone.
Residents in South Portland and Portland have often described strong neighborhood odors for years. These smells were frequently described as industrial in nature; given the large oil storage tanks nearby, local and state governments have been working to gauge the severity of the problem.
These cities have tracked thousands online smell complaints for this issue, logging the date, location, odor descriptions, and personal symptoms. You can visually explore this data for yourself below.
[INSERT COMPLAINT MAP HERE]
Throughout thousands of complaints, several descriptions of the local smells are repeated often: "petroleum", "tar", "oil", "asphalt", "sulfur", "gas". Hundreds of the complaints also mention feeling nausea, throat irritation, and headaches.
[AARON WILL PUT A GRAPHIC HERE TO DESCRIBE THE ODORS AND/OR SYMPTOMS]
The smells are reported most frequently along South Portland's northern coastline and throughout Portland's West End. There is a strong seasonal component to the complaints, which increase in the summer with higher temperatures.
[PICTURE CORRELATING TEMPERATURE WITH COMPLAINTS]
The smells appear to correlate strongly with wind direction in some places. Inside Portland's West End, odor complaints are much likelier on days the wind is blowing from the south - i.e., the direction of South Portland's oil storage tanks.
[PICTURE OF SOUTH WIND HISTOGRAM]
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Instructions
Select a county to change geographic focus of the map on the right. Select a data source to view different layers on top of the map.
Methodology
This map visualizes internet tier and underserved areas on a county-by-county basis. By breaking down the dataset into county-sized pieces, the map can show full resolution without sacrificing too much speed or usability.
This space is reserved for further commentary pending conversation with the stakeholders.
Acknowledgements
Developed by DS5110 students at The Roux Institute, Northeastern University, Spring 2022.